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Egenera tucks Xen into management platform

By Jennifer Mears , Network World , 11/15/2006

Egenera is partnering with XenSource to tuck the open source Xen hypervisor into the management software it uses to group its blade servers into a pool of compute resources in which application workloads are shifted according to business demands.

By adding Xen into the mix, Egenera’s Processing Area Network (PAN) Manager software can be used not only to provision and allocate physical servers, but also to provision and allocate virtual machines within Egenera’s BladeFrame system. BladeFrame includes diskless processing blades, control blades, switches and interconnects, all managed with the PAN Manager software.

BladeFrame
Egenera's BladeFrame

For years, Egenera's BladeFrame system has offered users a pool of virtual compute resources that can be allocated on demand. The company's new vBlade software extends the system's virtual capabilities. Its Xen open source hypervisor lets users manage and migrate workloads across physical servers and virtual machines.

Click to see: BladeFrame

By adding Xen into the mix, Egenera’s Processing Area Network (PAN) Manager software can be used not only to provision and allocate physical servers, but also to provision and allocate virtual machines within Egenera’s BladeFrame system. BladeFrame includes diskless processing blades, control blades, switches and interconnects, all managed with the PAN Manager software.

Egenera’s new software, called vBlade, integrates XenSource’s XenEnterprise package into PAN Manager. XenEnterprise supports both Linux- and Windows-based virtual machines running atop the Xen hypervisor, enabling users to provision virtual machines and then migrate them among physical servers as needed.

With vBlade, Egenera customers will be able to migrate workloads across both physical servers and virtual machines within one BladeFrame or among multiple BladeFrame systems, says Susan Davis, vice president of marketing at Egenera.

“VBlade allows customers to take advantage of all the benefits that virtual machines or hypervisors provide in terms of greater server utilization and greater efficiency, but without adding any complexity – without having to add yet another set of management tools to provision and manage,” Davis says. “Out-of-the-box high availability, disaster recovery and all of the capabilities that we’ve been providing in our product for five years is now extended to a virtual environment.”